Saskatoon's new urgent care centre breaks ground
Premier Scott Moe was in Saskatoon alongside chiefs and ministers Wednesday to mark the beginning of construction on Saskatoon’s new urgent care centre.
“The urgent care centre will provide services for a number of different types of patients,” said health minister Everett Hindley. “Those that require perhaps a health service that can’t wait until tomorrow but is not of an urgent nature.”
The facility is a partnership between the province, Saskatchewan Health Authority, and Ahtahkakoop Cree Developments to repurpose the former Pleasant Hill School into a medical centre that hopes to alleviate pressure on hospital emergency departments.
“We’re taking it down to the bones inside,” said Jay Ahenakew Funk of Ahtahkakoop Cree Developments. “And we have partnerships that we’ve created.
We have a pharmacy going in, we’ve got our imaging teamed up with S.I.I.T. We’re doing a partnership on X-ray techs, we’re dealing with mental health and addictions.”
In Regina, the urgent care centre opened earlier this year in July 2024. Saskatchewan Health Authority CEO Andrew Will says it’s making an immediate impact.
“On average, the Regina UCC is seeing about 110, 120 patients per day,” said Will. “Nearly nine thousand patients have been seen in that two and a half months, so a very significant impact.”
Ahtahkakoop Cree Nation Chief Larry Ahenakew and Premier Scott Moe agree that the mental health and addictions treatment component of the urgent care centre is equally as important as taking stress off hospital emergency departments.
“The urgent care centre is really important,” said Chief Ahenakew. “But mental health, addiction is just as important. Returning all our communities, addictions are affecting our First Nations also.”
Moe says the partnership with Ahtahkakoop Cree Developments benefits everyone.
“The partnership is significant because the beneficiary is everyone,” he said. “The beneficiary in this case will be not just the community of Saskatoon, Indigenous and non-Indigenous people that may reside here, but the surrounding area as well. Both on the physical health care side, but also on the access to mental health care and addictions.”
Construction begins this fall and is expected to be finished by spring 2026.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
LIVE UPDATES Tracking Hurricane Milton: Millions told to evacuate from worst storm 'in 100 years to hit Florida'
U.S. forecasters are warning of destructive waves, devastating winds and flash floods through the week as Hurricane Milton makes its way from the Yucatan Peninsula toward Florida.
Meteorologist becomes emotional giving update on Hurricane Milton
A seasoned American meteorologist became emotional on air as he gave an update on a major hurricane, later suggesting the reason behind his strong reaction.
'I hope so': Marc Garneau on whether Liberal party still has room for Blue Liberals
Former cabinet minister Marc Garneau, who describes himself in his new book as always-a-Liberal, 'but a decidedly blue one,' says he hopes the party still has room for someone like him.
'Extremely disappointed': Family of homicide victim storms out of courtroom as judge reads decision
Emotions boiled over after a judge acquitted two out of three defendants in a manslaughter case, while the third accused has since died.
WeightWatchers to offer compounded version of Wegovy weight-loss drug
WeightWatchers said on Tuesday it would offer a compounded version of Novo Nordisk's popular obesity drug Wegovy as part of its weight-management programs.
One American physician's long journey to becoming a family doctor in Canada
An American family doctor is frustrated with what she says has been a challenging two-year-and-counting bureaucratic journey to be accepted into Canada.
Is it safe to buy from Temu and Shein? Here's what Canada says it's doing to try to protect consumers
As U.S. regulators push for an investigation into what they call 'deadly baby and toddler products' from foreign e-commerce sites, health officials in Canada say they haven't determined whether any laws or regulations have been broken.
opinion Tom Mulcair: Pierre Poilievre's dramatic side could become his undoing
In his column for CTVNews.ca, former NDP leader Tom Mulcair argues that the dramatic side to Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, and his tendency to 'play everything to the hilt,' could well become his undoing.
8 million doses in 6 months: CBSA shares details of Australia-bound meth seizures
Border officers in B.C.'s Lower Mainland made more than 60 seizures of methamphetamine bound for Australia in a six-month span earlier this year, totalling more than eight million doses of the drug.